Just sixteen people under the age of 20 have died of Covid this year in England and Wales, according to official data.
Weekly fatality data from the Office of National Statistics (ONS) also shows daily coronavirus deaths are now in single figures in every region of England.
The figures will inevitably pile more pressure on Boris Johnson to speed up his ultra-cautious lockdown-easing plans, which won’t see the next set of restrictions eased until May 17.
The most up-to-date statistics — for the week ending April 9 — showed that nearly 60 per cent of all the 56,910 Covid deaths in 2021 were in over-80s. Just 0.03 per cent were in under-20s.
But in more proof that the vaccines are working, the number of elderly people succumbing to Covid every week has fallen by 97 per cent since the peak of the second wave in January. Under-60s make-up around one fifth of all Covid deaths now, up from 7 per cent during the darkest spell of the crisis.
The ONS figures come after Britain recorded just four coronavirus deaths yesterday, in the lowest daily toll since September 7.
Covid metrics are usually low on Mondays due to the way fatalities are logged but were still down on the figure recorded last Monday (13).
The daily death figures, supplied by the Department of Health, differ to the ONS. It counts Covid victims as being anyone who dies within 28 days of testing positive for the virus. And the daily count only looks at registrations not occurrences.
For comparison, the ONS looks at death certificates to determine the true scale of the crisis. The agency believes the overall number of victims topped 150,000 at the end of March.
Just sixteen people under the age of 20 have died of Covid this year in England and Wales — 0.03 per cent — according to official data
Overall, weekly death registrations from all causes rose slightly from 8,201 to 9,098, while deaths from Covid fell slightly from 400 to 379.
But experts said this was down to the bank holiday weekend falling in the week covered by the last set of figures, meaning some deaths would have been added on to today’s count.
When the ONS figures were broken down into occurrences — a more accurate way of tracking the crisis, Covid fatalities fell 35 per cent from 348 to 226.
It was the lowest weekly death toll in England and Wales since September 18 and was the equivalent of the virus making up less than one in 20 (4.2 per cent) of all deaths.
The number of deaths registered in England and Wales was below the five-year average for the fifth consecutive week, the ONS also said.
This is because the Covid crisis is continuing to shrink and the pandemic front-loaded deaths, meaning many of its victims died last Spring.
One in five British adults now have the best available protection against Covid — contributing to the plummeting death figures, with almost all of the country’s most vulnerable people now covered.
Another 221,193 people got their booster jabs on Sunday, taking the total to 10,152,039. A total of 32.8million people have had their first dose of a vaccine
In the most recent week, deaths fell in all age groups other than 20- to 24-year-olds and 40- 44-year-olds — but the number of fatalities were too tiny to notice any actual difference.
Separate analysis showed deaths involving Covid among people aged 80 and over have fallen by nearly 100 per cent since the second-wave peak.
A total of 172 Covid-19 deaths in the 80-and-over age group occurred in England and Wales in the week ending April 2, down from 5,361 deaths in the week ending January 22.
Deaths for those aged 75 to 79 and 70 to 74 also dropped 97 per cent in the same period, compared with falls of 95 per cent for those aged 65 to 69 and 93 per cent for those aged 60 to 64.
The figures suggest vaccines are working because younger people now make up a higher proportion of Covid deaths than before, from three per cent of deaths occurring in under-50s in the week ending January 8 to four per cent in the most recent week.
Regionally, daily death numbers have fallen to fewer than seven in all areas of England as of April 9. In the week ending April 8, the North East recorded the lowest death total with 12.
The North East saw zero death on April 9 for the first time since September 14.
It comes as No10 continues to face pressure to ease Covid restrictions more quickly, with more than 10million people now having had their second coronavirus vaccines.
Experts estimate the jabs have already saved 10,000 lives while the country’s three-month lockdown brought down case rates and hospital admissions.
Health Secretary Hancock said uptake of the jab so far has been ‘astonishingly high’ and that the country remains on track to offer a first jab to all adults by the end of July. It also remains on track, he said, to come out of lockdown in June.
The next step on the roadmap is set for May 17 at the earliest, when indoor gatherings will be allowed as well as large groups outdoors. Indoor entertainment venues will be able to reopen and international travel may be permitted.
As lockdown-sceptic Tory MPs continue to call for a faster road back to normality, Mr Hancock said he hoped legal requirements would be dropped but people would keep acting more cautiously than they used to.
Mark Harper, Conservative MP for the Forest of Dean and chair of the Covid Recovery Group, questioned if the UK will be ‘broadly back to normal without social distancing’ by June 21.
Matt Hancock replied in the Commons: ‘Any decisions like that would be based on the evidence and we have far more evidence now than we did when making these decisions previously.
‘I fully expect that there will be some areas of life – without the need for laws in this place – where people will behave more cautiously than previously, and the wearing of masks is one where before this pandemic wearing a mask in public in this country was extremely unusual, and I’d imagine some people will wear masks and choose to wear masks for some time to come.
‘Our goal is to manage this virus, to manage the pandemic that it’s caused, like flu.’